Jim123 wrote:My interpretation is that what we are being sold is a cropping of the Pan Scan version not a letterbox they are claiming.
So it is useless to compare because your copy is a Pan Scan to start, with a mat placed on the top and bottom to make it look like a different release.
That is what I suspect, that it isn't a cropped pan & scan like is claimed. The DVD is widescreen, that is, a 1.33 image with the mattes correctly placed to create the intended 1.85 ratio. The framing seems correct throughout, in fact a few scenes still have quite a bit of space above actor's heads.
Jim123 wrote:I have found in comparing movies is that they give you some on the sides (they can give more but they don't) and take away from the top and bottom. They could just leave the top and bottom alone without making any difference to the width they present us. It's a game they play to make profit.
I'm confused by what you are saying. Leaving the top and bottom visible means a 4:3 image, do you mean you prefer that ratio?
Jim123 wrote:In Pan Scan movies I have noticed heads being cut off and the center of interest is centered on the screen, for me this is a dead giveaway.
Pan & scan movies remove picture information from the side, not the top and bottom. The giveaway is a blurriness as the 4:3 frame pans across the widescreen frame. Also it is normal for movies to be framed so that the very top of an actor's head is beyond the top of the frame. Some directors like their shots framed very tightly like that.
I'm not defending MGM, certainly not if this turns out to be true (I remember when Redemption UK did this with the VHS of The Crazies), I'm just saying that someone may have been mistaken. I don't expect the average DVD buyer to know about movie ratios and the many types of widescreen and how they should be correctly displayed, but if you're going to serve a lawsuit you really need to do your homework!
It's easy to imagine someone comparing their widescreen copy with someone else's unmatted 4:3 copy and thinking they are being swindled out of so much picture.